Comedian Edgar Kennedy joined Mack Sennett in 1913 as an original Keystone Kop in The Bangville Police. He both acted and directed with Chaplin, Arbuckle, Ben Turpin and all the Sennett comics in the early days. In 1928 Edgar went to Hal Roach and is well remembered today as Kennedy the Cop and other roles with Laurel and Hardy, Thelma Todd, Charlie Chase and Our Gang. His most famous part is the lemonade vendor in the Marx Brothers “Duck Soup.”

Edgar hit his stride in the 1930s and ’40s appearing in dozens of features while starring in his own Average Man RKO series that produced 103 two-reel comedies from 1931 to 1948. Edgar became world famous for his slow-burn/face-wipe reaction to life’s indignities. It comes as little surprise that such a comic icon made his mark in cartoons as well.

Newspaper cartoonist Fontaine Fox created the comic strip “Toonerville Folk” in 1908. It’s look at the oddball denizens and foibles of a small town on the edge of a big city (i.e. suburbs) became so popular that the strip ran until 1955. The Toonerville Trolley to and from town and run by The Skipper was central to many gags. One of the richly sketched characters was the town bully Mickey McGuire, who was played in late silent/early sound shorts by Mickey Rooney. Another character that caught on with readers was “The Terrible Tempered Mr. Bang” as pictured here in a one panel strip.

No evidence suggests that Edgar Kennedy’s emerging personality in his Roach and RKO series is based on Mr. Bang. In fact Edgar rarely blows his top. His patience is pushed to the limit until he finds grudging acceptance of his fate and lets it all out in his trademark slow burn. What Mr. Bang did was introduce audiences to a man severely tested and to the inherent humor in losing one’s temper. Edgar at Hal Roach was tested often with disregard for his authority as a policeman by Laurel and Hardy in Leave ‘Em Laughing (1928), as Uncle Edgar with the gouty foot that gets bopped a dozen times in A Perfect Day (1929), as the recipient of ice cream cones to his head in A Pair of Tights (1929) and more. Edgar refined Mr. Bang’s outbursts into simmering slow burns at RKO.

How about Edgar’s influence on animated cartoon characters in the movies? Who was often frustrated to the point of glowering, simmering and seething with rage until he could take no more and blew his stack? As his opening theme song goes:

Who’s got the sweetest disposition?
One guess that’s who.
Who never, never starts an argument?
Who never shows a bit of temperament?
Who’s never wrong, but always right?
Who’d never dream of starting a fight?
Who gets stuck with all of that luck?
No one, but Donald Duck.

Wikipedia: Donald’s two dominant personality traits are his short temper and his positive outlook on life. Many Donald shorts start with Donald in a happy mood, without a care in the world until something comes along and spoils his day. His anger is a great cause of suffering in his life. On multiple occasions, it has caused him to get in over his head and lose competitions. There are times when he fights to keep his temper, and he sometimes succeeds in doing so temporarily, but he always returns to his normal angry self in the end.

Edgar Kennedy developed his similar character in the late 1920s, made his first RKO short in 1931 and had laid claim to the gesture and term “slow burn” by the mid-1930s. Donald first appeared in 1934′s The Wise Little Hen and took a few years to refine his character, a major facet of which was blowing his stack after repeated aggravations. This model sheet (above) at first glance appears to be a guide to 1940s Donald Duck animators, although it was drawn by 1990′s Disney comics cartoonist Pat Block. Enlarge it to read the comment: “Sometimes it’s funny to let Donald react to a situation. He boils awhile before exploding.”

So there is a strong case that Edgar influenced Donald, but they are not that close. Donald blows up and Edgar tries not to. No physical resemblance, that’s for sure, but another cartoon character does look like Edgar, has a temper problem he tries to control and his cartoon plots could have been written for Edgar!

Is “Pop” bald under that hat?Andy Panda first appeared in the 1939 Walter Lantz Universal cartune Life Begins for Andy Panda. Andy is still famous today for his many theatrical cartoons made through 1949 and as Woody Woodpecker’s pal in comic books. It’s Andy’s father or “Pop” that has so much in common with Edgar Kennedy.

One of my earliest childhood memories is watching an 8mm, black and white, silent version of Crazy House (1940), again and again from the age of four on. It ran about 12 minutes at 8mm “silent” speed and included inter-titles like all silents. On a dark and stormy night Andy and Pop drive through a storm and right into a deep puddle. At the bottom of the pond Pop has to count to ten to simmer down. Later they find refuge in a carnival fun house that is closed for the season. Trying to get a drink from a fountain also tests Pop’s patience as every little annoyance does. “Count to ten,” Andy keeps reminding him. In the fade-out gag, again at the bottom of that pond, he turns purple with rage, counts down from ten by 2s and so cools down to normal in alternate stripes.

Pop did not appear in that many cartoons, but 1940′s Knock Knock was memorable as the first cartoon with future star Woody Woodpecker. You can see how well they got along. Simple plots like “Get bird off roof” drove most of Edgar Kennedy’s two-reelers.

In 1941 Pop soloed in Andy Panda’s Pop in which Andy does not even appear, although Mrs. Panda does briefly. The plot is pure Edgar Kennedy: Andy’s Pop asks the local roofing company if they will repair his shoddy roof. He is quickly turned off by the exorbitant price and determines, “I’ll fix it myself!” Naturally, Pop isn’t the most skilled of workers but does his best anyway. Unfortunately, his best turns to his worst when an annoying pelican distracts him by making the roof his new home. Pop angrily tries to rid himself of the feathered pest (who just wants to mind his own business) and destroys the roof more than ever in the process. Admitting defeat, he again calls the roofing company only to be irately told, “FIX IT YOURSELF!!!”

Edgar made the short I’ll Fix It in 1941 as well, in which he tries to install a new hot-water heater, but the theme of him and the family fixing something they should never mess with goes way back to repairing an airplane in Thanks Again (1931). Edgar Kennedy had firmly staked out his character by the mid-1930s. His slow burn was famous the world over. Any cartoon that borrowed Edgar’s mannerisms was an homage to the comedian and to the comedy inherent in repressed anger.

For whatever reasons, Walter Lantz did not use Pop again but preferred the cuter, smaller and decidely less complex Andy Panda, while Woody was left to do battle with Wally Walrus and Buzz Buzzard. This was probably best for Edgar Kennedy, who didn’t need an angry, bald cartoon rival.

Far less enduring than Edgar Kennedy, and far angrier, Mr. Bang is featured in the 1936 Van Beuren cartoon “Trolley Ahoy.”

11 Comments

Andy Decker

August 31, 2013 1:46:06 am

That’s the very first time I ever saw one of these toons and I loved it!Too bad they weren’t on tv as often as the other studios.It’s nice to see those toons that aren’t seen very often on tv(Van Buren,Screen Gems,et al)Thanks,Jerry and Ron!

With all due respect to the author, who wrote a wonderful column on this subject, I should like to point out (in the name of accuracy) that two of the lines in the quoted Donald Duck theme song each have an incorrect word or two. The second line is really, “One guess! Guess who?” And the next-to-last line is, “Who gets stuck with all the bad luck?” I have the Mickey Mouse Club 78 rpm record from 1957 called MOUSECARTOON TIME. “Donald Duck’s Song” is one of the songs on that record. It was performed much slower than on the cartoon soundtracks, and the enunciation of the lyrics is very clear, and is sung as I have described here.

On another point, I did not realize that Andy Panda’s pop’s rage scenes were modelled after Edgar Kennedy. But I get the resemblance now, and I thank you for that!

When I was living in Dallas in the ’80s there was an independent station that ran the Edgar Kennedy (and Leon Erroll) RKO shorts as filler when movies ran short. They were often quite entertaining two-reelers.

Another influence on Kennedy — but not so much on cartoons — was Laurel and Hardy with their deliberate, unhurried style: Laurel’s long, visual struggle to absorb the fact that his bucket of paint is now on Hardy’s head; Hardy’s majestic silence and meaningful gazes into the camera before he finally shoved somebody. When they played with Kennedy, that pacing gave room for him to expand and embroider his slow burns to legendary proportions.

I seem to remember the Fleischer Bluto doing a hammy version of the Kennedy face wipe on occasion, usually with Popeye’s heh-heh-heh-hhe-heh-heh in the background.

A 1937 Terrytoon ‘Bugs Beetle and His Orchestra’ has its spider-villain morph into a very specific Edgar Kennedy caricature at a moment of extreme frustration. For one shot, the spider turns bald, has the very familiar humanoid features, and does the whole face rubbing slow burn thing!

One thing I’ve always wondered… the voices and overall bearing sound similar, and the facepalming gesture is very alike… was Hugh Harman’s “Papa Bear,” who was later spun-off into a few cartoons where he reacted in Edgar Kennedy fashion often.

The characters all start to resemble one another, but almost all the characters in MGM cartoons who had a voice were based off radio characters… Barney Bear to Wallace Beery, Droopy to Wallace Wimple, Screwy to Wilbur, etc.

About Ron Hall

RON HALL Is an expert in public domain features, cartoons and shorts, offered through his company Festival Films since 1976, and which may be used by anyone without royalty payments. Ron was co-editor with David Mruz of the cartoon fanzine "Mindrot" in the early 1980s. To learn more about "Industrial Strength America," visit Ron's Lost & Rare website, which promises to release Jay Ward's 1948 Pilot Film "The Comic Strips of Television" in January. You can watch a sample HERE.